The Guardian’s chief football writer, Daniel Taylor (right), is presented with the scoop of the year award by Andy Woodward.
Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images

Daniel Taylor picked up two major prizes at Monday night’s prestigious Sports Journalists Association awards for his reporting of the football abuse scandal, being named football journalist of the year and winning scoop of the year.

Football is listening on child abuse but took far too long to do so | Daniel Taylor

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Taylor’s original Guardian story, published in November, led to the reporting of hundreds of historical allegations of sexual abuse. Last month detectives were examining possible attacks on 526 people, with investigations by 20 police forces who had identified 184 potential suspects and 248 affected clubs at all levels of the game.

Judges said he “wrote the football story of the year, one which made headlines across all media”. They added it was “a huge story with vast and far-reaching consequences well beyond the sport itself” and paid tribute to his “superb, sensitive, powerful journalism”.

Owen Gibson (left), the Guardian’s head of sport, and James Dart (right), editor of theguardian.com/sport receive the Sports Website of the Year award from Andy Reed, director of the Sports Think Tank at Loughborough University. Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images

“In a very competitive category, the winner’s insight and revelations about the sex scandal that has besmirched football was explosive and challenging,” the judges added.

Andy Woodward, the former Crewe player whose decision to waive his anonymity and speak with Taylor prompted a flood of other victims to come forward, was also present at the awards and addressed the audience.

“Without all of you, this would never have happened. It’s mind blowing. I’m going to try and continue to safeguard children moving forward,” Woodward said.

“This is important in sport. Not just football, but all sports. I can’t thank all of you journalists enough from the bottom of my heart.”

The judging panel added that the football abuse scandal “was a difficult story, brilliantly and sensitively told. The facts of the story were horrifying and shocking but the winner’s style and sensitive approach managed to make these facts ever-so-slightly easier to read.”

Judges described Ingle’s work as “personable, with an almost anecdotal tone, which makes for easy, informative reading.” Describing Ingle as “a modern story-teller”, the panel also commended his “style, authority, investigative zeal and compelling grasp of narrative structure.”

The Guardian’s sport website was named website of the year for the third time in succession. Judges said it was “the destination of choice for serious sports fans. Live coverage is invariably elegant, witty and most importantly quick. The site looks handsome, is easily navigable and boasts some of the finest sports journalism around.”

The Guardian and Observer were also highly commended in six categories: cricket writers Vic Marks and Rob Smyth, columnist Marina Hyde, Television Sport for our Hillsborough documentary, Owen Gibson for sports news reporter, and multimedia package for our coverage of Rio 2016.